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DIRECTORATE OF DISTANCE EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF KASHMIR Course Structure for MA Economics Programme effective from 2011 & onwards M A Economics 1st Semester ECO-210 Microeconomics-I ECO-211 Macroeconomics-I ECO-212 Mathematical Economics ECO-213 Economics of Development ECO-214 International Trade M A Economics 2nd Semester ECO-215 Microeconomics-II ECO-216 Macroeconomics-II ECO-217 Quantitative Techniques in Economics ECO-218 Economics of Growth ECO-219 International Finance rd M A Economics 3 Semester ECO-220 Theory of Public Economics ECO-221 Indian Economy-I ECO-222 Monetary Economics ECO-223 Political Economy-I ECO-224 Demography ECO-225 Econometrics ECO-226 Indian Financial System ECO-227 Research Methodology th M A Economics 4 Semester ECO-228 Money and Finance In India ECO-229 Indian Economy-II ECO-230 Environmental Economics ECO-231 Political Economics-II ECO-232 J&K Economy ECO-233 Economics of Education and Health ECO-234 Computer Applications ECO-235 Project Report M A Economics Syllabus Effective from 2011 Onwards 1 M A Economics 1st Semester ECO-210 Microeconomics-I ECO-211 Macroeconomics-I ECO-212 Mathematical Economics ECO-213 Economics of Development ECO-214 International Trade M A Economics Syllabus Effective from 2011 Onwards 2 SEMESTER-I (Compulsory) Microeconomics-I Course Code: Eco-210 Unit 1 Choice under Certainty Preferences and utility; Indifference curve and MRS; Utility functions; Utility maximization and choice; Indirect utility function; Dual of utility function; Homogeneity of demand functions; Income and substitution effects; Individual demand curve and compensated demand curve; Revealed preference hypothesis; Market demand functions; Relationship among elasticities; Linear and constant elasticity demand functions. Unit 2 Choice under Uncertainty Expected utility, Von Newman-Morgenstern utility index, Expected utility maximization; Risk aversion and insurance premium; Asymmetric information- implications; Market signaling; Moral hazard; Principal-agent problems and solutions. Unit 3 Theory of Production and Costs Production function; Law of variable proportions; Isoquant; Returns to scale; Elasticity of substitution; Some common production functions; Technical progress; Cost minimizing input choices; Expansion path; Cost functions, short-run and long-run distinctions. Unit 4 Pricing and Output under Different Forms of Market Structure Perfect competition—short run and long-run equilibrium of the firm and industry; Constant, increasing and decreasing cost industries; Analysis of competitive markets; Monopoly—short- run and long-run equilibrium; Social cost of monopoly; Price discrimination—various degrees; Analysis of monopoly markets. REFERENCES 1. Salvatore, D. 2003. Micro economics; Theory and Applications. Oxford University Press, New Delhi. 2. Perloff, J. M. 2001. Microeconomics. Addison Wisely Longman, India. 3. Nicholson, W. 1992. Microeconomic Theory: Basic Principals and Extensions. The Dryden Press , USA 4. Pindyck R. S. and Ruboinfeld, D. L. 1999. Microeconomics. Prentice Hall of India. 5. Koutsoyiannis, A. 1979. Modern Microeconomics. Macmillan Press, London. 6. Layard, P. R. G. and Walters, A.W. 1978. Microeconomic Theory. McGraw Hill, New York. 7. Sen. A. K. 1999. Microeconomics - Theory and Applications. Oxford University Press, New Delhi 8. Boumol, W. J. 1982. Economic Theory and Operational Analysis. Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi. M A Economics Syllabus Effective from 2011 Onwards 3 SEMESTER-I (Compulsory) Macroeconomics-I Course code: Eco- 211 Unit 1 National Income and Social Accounting Social accounting— concept and importance; net economic welfare (NEW); measures of economic welfare (MEW); GNP and welfare measures; Main features and types of social accounts; national income and product accounts, input-output accounting, flow of funds accounts, Balance of payment accounting and national balance sheets; matrix presentation of social accounting; environmental accounting. Unit 2 Sectoral Demand Functions Income-consumption relationship; life cycle-permanent income theory of consumption and saving; consumption under uncertainty—the modern approach. Consumption and stock markets—the Barrow-Ricardo problem. Investment demand—Neoclassical and Keynesian versions (MEC approach); acceleration principle; Keynesian dynamic multiplier. Unit 3 Economic Fluctuations and Stabilization Multiplier-accelerator interaction; Theories of trade cycle—Keynes, Hicks, Samuelson and Kaldor. Control of business cycles; Relative efficacy of monetary and fiscal policies. Unit 4 Theory of Output, Inflation and Unemployment Friedman’s theory of natural rate of unemployment and output. Short- run and long-run Philips curve—Monetarist and Keynesian views. Stabilization policies for output and employment— the Keynesian view. Inflation-unemployment trade-off—sticky wage model, imperfect information model, sticky price model. REFERENCES 1. Shapiro, E. 2005. Macro Economic Analysis (5th Edition). Galgotia Publications. New Delhi. 2. Froyen R. T. 2005. Macroeconomics (7th Edition). Pearson Education. Delhi 3. Dornbusch, Fischer, Stratz 2004. Macroeconomics, (9th Edition). Tata McGraw-Hill. New Delhi. 4. Mankiw, N. G. 2006. Macroeconomics, (5th Edition), Worth Publications. New York. 5. Carlin, W. and Soskice, D. 2007. Macroeconomics (Indian Edition) 6. Mishkin, F. S. 1997. The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets, (5th Edition), Addison Wesley, New York. 7. Levacic, R. and Rebman, A. 1982. Macroeconomics- An Introduction to Keynesian- Neoclassical Controversies, (2nd Edition), MacMillan, London. 8. Hall, R. E. and Taylor, J. B. 1997. Macroeconomics (5th Edition), W.W. Norton and Company. New York/ London. 9. Sebold, V. Macroeconomic Models and Policy. WIE Wiley. 10. Gupta, R D and Rana A S. 1997. Keynes Post Keynesian Economics. Kalyani Publishers, New Delhi. 11. Miles D. and Scott, A. 2005. Macroeconomics – Understanding the Wealth of Nations. John Wiely and Sons, Inc. England. 12. Roger, E. and Salanti A. (Eds.) 2004. Macroeconomics and the Real World—Keynesian Economics, Unemployment and Policy (Vol. 2). Oxford University Press, New York. M A Economics Syllabus Effective from 2011 Onwards 4
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